The word 'painted' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to paint. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective. Examples:
Verb: Bubba painted his truck green.
Adjective: Skeeters chrome bumpers on his Ford looked better than the painted bumpers on his Chevy.
Yes' the word excellent is an adjective.
The adjective form is the word "national".
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
Yes, it is an adjective.
No, an adjective is a describing word.
The word painter is a noun, a person who paints. The adjective form is painted (a painted door, a painted portrait). There is no adverb form.
No. The word "painted" is a verb form, or an adjective. It can form a participial phrase, but it cannot be a preposition.
He painted the window still.
You should hyphenate "hand-painted" when it precedes the word it is modifying, as in "a hand-painted tray". However, if it is a predicate adjective, as in "All the signs were hand painted", you would not hyphenate it.
The adjective "hand-painted" uses the hyphenated form.
No, the word "same" is not an adverb."Same" is an adjective and a pronoun.Click here to see "same" in a dictionary.
No, the word NEW is a descriptive word, an adjective; the adverb form would be NEWLY. Example uses:Jane bought a new dress for the party.The newly painted dog house doesn't look shabby now.
Magnificent is an adjective. For example: She painted a dramatic landscape of magnificent mountains. Magnificently, a derivative of magnificent, is an adverb.
The ISBN of The Painted Word is 0553273795.
The Painted Word was created in 1975.
The Painted Word has 153 pages.
No, the word 'there' is not possessive. The pronouns that show possession are spelled their and theirs.The pronoun 'their' is a possessive adjective, a word that takes the place of a possessive noun.The pronoun 'theirs' is a possessive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to two or more people or things.Examples:We painted the children's room.Or: We painted their room.The room we painted was the children's.Or: The room we painted was theirs.Many dictionaries designate the word 'there' as a pronoun when it introduces a sentence or a clause, usually followed by a form of the verb 'to be'; for example: There are four children.